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		<title>A Reply to Nick Roger’s Workers Unity not Separatism</title>
		<link>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2010/04/26/a-reply-to-nick-roger%e2%80%99s-workers-unity-not-separatism/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2010 19:45:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Reply to Nick Roger’s Workers Unity not Separatism (edited version in Weekly Worker, no. 211) Independent Action Required to Achieve Genuine Workers’ Unity First, I would like to thank Nick for the tenor of his contribution to the debate about communist strategy in the states of the UK and the 26 county Irish republic. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>A Reply to Nick Roger’s Workers Unity not Separatism (edited version in <cite>Weekly Worker</cite>, no. 211)</h2>
<h3>Independent Action Required to Achieve Genuine Workers’ Unity</h3>
<p>First, I would like to thank Nick for the tenor of his contribution to the debate about communist strategy in the states of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and the 26 county Irish republic. After our initial sparring in earlier issues of <cite>Weekly Worker</cite> and on the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> website Nick’s contribution develops further his own case for a British approach and a British party. (I am still not sure to what extent the alternative and logically more consistent one state/one party stance of having an all-<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> party is supported in the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>.) Nick also usefully clears up some points himself (e.g. over his attitude to Luxemburgism) and asks a question which is designed to advance the debate. Before going on to the other issues Nick raises, I will therefore answer this question on whether I support breakaway unions in Scotland.</p>
<h3>How to win effective union solidarity </h3>
<p>I have consistently argued that the struggle to attain effective union organisation can not be reduced to which national flag flies over a union HQ. Most of the Left, in practice, uphold the sovereignty of the union officials located in their existing union HQs, hoping to replace these some day. This is why many of their union campaigns amount to electoral attempts to replace existing union leaderships with Broad Left leaderships. In more and more cases, the latest Broad Left challenges are being mounted against old Broad Left leaderships, suggesting a serious flaw in this strategy! </p>
<p>Of course, many on the Left would say &#8211; ‘No’, we champion the sovereignty of the union conference. However, the relationship between most union conferences and their union bureaucracies is very similar to that between Westminster and the government of the day.  In both cases, executives only implement what they wish to, whilst systematically undermining any conference/election policies they, or the employers/ruling class, oppose.  In the case of unions, this division is accentuated by elected-for-life and appointed officials, who enjoy pay and perks way beyond those of their members &#8211; a bit like Cabinet ministers.</p>
<p>Therefore, I uphold the sovereignty of the membership in their workplaces &#8211; a republican rank and file industrial strategy, if you like. From this viewpoint ‘unofficial’ action, the term used by bureaucrats to undermine members and to reassert their control, is rejected in favour of the term independent action. Action undertaken by branches can be extended by picketing, and by wider delegate or mass meetings.  Certainly, this places a considerable responsibility upon the membership in the branches concerned, necessitating their active involvement in strategic and tactical discussion over the possibilities for extending effective action.  Furthermore, instead of politics being largely confined to the select few &#8211; union bureaucrats and conference attenders &#8211; as when unions are affiliated to the Labour Party &#8211; politics becomes a vital necessity in workplace branches.</p>
<p>Nick asks, how can the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> effectively support action by, for example, civil servants who are organised on an all-British union basis, when we are organised on a Scottish political basis? Actually, it is quite easy. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> has members on the executives of all-Britain trade unions, and we seek wider unity for effective action with officers and delegates from England and Wales. Indeed, we can go further and state that we would seek cooperation with union members in Northern Ireland, when action involves all-<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> unions, such as the <acronym title="Fire Brigades Union">FBU</acronym>. Yet, in the latter case, support for joint action over economic issues should not prevent socialists raising the political issue of Ireland’s breakaway from the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state.  There is an obvious analogy here for the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>.</p>
<p>Indeed, there are three other territorial union forms in these islands, &#8211; Northern Irish unions (e.g. Northern Ireland Public Services Alliance), Irish unions which organise in the North (e.g. Irish National Teachers Union and the Independent Workers Union) and all-islands unions (e.g. <acronym title="Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians">UCATT</acronym>). Nick’s attempt to equate more effective action with all-Britain unions would in no way help socialists to bring about unity in such varied circumstances. Championing the sovereignty of the union branch, and the forging of unity from below in expanding action, offer the best way of achieving this.</p>
<p>Nick mentions the Educational Institute of Scotland (<acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym>) &#8211; the major teaching union in Scotland, and one of the last unions organised on a Scottish basis. The <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym> is affiliated, not only to the <acronym title="Scottish Trades Union Congress">STUC</acronym>, but to the <acronym title="Trades Union Congress">TUC</acronym> and, although not affiliated to the Labour Party, its leadership has, since the mid 1970’s, been as loyal to Labour as any. The <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym> is one of the strongest adherents of ‘social partnership’, with large chunks of its official journal indistinguishable from government/management spin &#8211; especially its articles on governmental education initiatives.</p>
<p>Until I retired, I was a member of the <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym>, a union rep (shop steward) for 34 years, and served on the union’s Edinburgh Local Executive and National Council. I was also a member of Scottish Rank &amp; File Teachers (until they were sabotaged by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>) and later the Scottish Federation of Socialist Teachers. I always upheld the sovereignty of the membership in their branches.  Furthermore, I was also centrally involved in the largest campaign that rocked the Scottish educational world and the <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym>, in 1973. Here, for the first time, I came up against the sort of arguments Nick raises. </p>
<p>The 1973 strike action was organised unofficially/independently. It took place over more than three months, with huge weekly, school delegate-based meetings. We also argued within the official structures of the <acronym title="Educational Institute of Scotland">EIS</acronym> (whilst even drawing in some members of the two other small unions).  It was here that the old <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, Labour Party and Militant supporters told us we should end our independent action and confine ourselves to getting motions passed calling on the union leadership to take a national lead. </p>
<p>If we had done this, it is likely there would have been no industrial action at all. As it was, the massive independent action forced the official leadership to move. And it was the independent rank and file movement, which sent delegates to schools in England to try and widen the challenge to the Tory government over pay. Labour Party and <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> union officers, all stalwart Left British unionists, confined official union activity to Scotland!</p>
<p>There is a definite parallel between Nick’s advocacy that the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> should abandon its own independent organisation and join with the British Left, planning for the ‘big bang’ British/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> revolution they hope for in the future, and those old <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, Left Labour and Militant arguments I first faced back in 1973.</p>
<h3>The anti-poll tax campaign &#8211; ‘internationalism from below’ in action</h3>
<p>Some years later, in 1988, I became chair of the first Anti-Poll Tax Federation (Lothians) and co-chair of the conference of the Scottish Anti-Poll Tax Federation. The campaign against the poll tax started a year earlier in Scotland, due to Thatcher’s propensity to impose her own form of devolution here &#8211; testing out reactionary legislation in Scotland first. </p>
<p>Militant emerged as the largest political organisation in the Federations. Militant became torn between those who wanted to maintain an all-Britain Labour Party orientation, continuing to prioritise activities inside the party’s official structures, and those who saw the necessity to become involved in independent action through the anti-poll tax unions. Fortunately, it was the latter view that won out.  </p>
<p>The negative effect of pursuing a tacitly British unionist strategy was demonstrated by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>. Their slogan was &#8211; <q>Kinnock and Willis {then <acronym title="Trades Union Congress">TUC</acronym> General Secretary}- get off your knees and fight</q> (i.e. pushing for others to lead).  They argued that only a Britain-wide campaign backed by the official trade union movement could win. When a special Labour Party conference in Glasgow voted against non-payment, the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> declared the game was over, and some Scottish members went on to pay their poll tax. </p>
<p>The majority in the Federations stuck to their guns and built the independent action first in Scotland, e.g. through non-payment, confronting sheriff officers (bailiffs), etc, and by sending delegations to England and Wales, to prepare people for widened action the following year. Spreading such action from below contributed to the Trafalgar Square riots of March 31st 1990, which put finally paid to the poll tax and to Thatcher. </p>
<p>‘Internationalism from below’, which the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> International Committee has advocated at the two Republican Socialist Conventions, represents a wider and more politicised development of such actions by our class. Any reading of our documents will show that our ‘internationalism from below’ stance flows from an analysis the concrete political situation, and unlike Nick’s and the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s stance, does not stem from some abstract attempt to extend a ‘one state/one party’ (or trade union) organisational form over all British/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> socialists; or from a belief in the efficacy of the top-down bureaucratic ‘internationalism’, which is intrinsic to such attempts.</p>
<p>Although rather belated in its formation, the Scottish Socialist Alliance, set up in 1996, directly stemmed from the lessons learned in the anti-poll tax campaign. (Socialist republicans in the Scottish Federation had argued for the setting up of such organisations from 1990.)  Furthermore, contrary to what Nick maintains, far from having a purely Scottish orientation, <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Alliance">SSA</acronym>/<acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> members took an active part, providing speakers, to help set up the Socialist Alliances in England, Wales and the Irish Socialist Network. The main obstacles we faced in helping to form new democratic united front organisations came from the British Left!  </p>
<p>Perhaps it is also significant that, after addressing large meetings in Scotland, some of the striking Liverpool dockers (1995-8) and their partners said that support here was often wider than in England. The response received from the <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym> trade union group in Dundee was compared very favourably with the coolness of many Labour Party members closer to home! The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Alliance">SSA</acronym> was particularly prominent in trying to win solidarity for the dockers in Scotland.</p>
<h3>Comparing records in trying to build socialist/communist unity</h3>
<p>Now, Nick goes on to make some valid criticisms of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Alliance">SSA</acronym>’s successor organisation, the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>, particularly over its handling of the Tommy Sheridan affair. However, here it is necessary to compare like with like. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> is only a small political organisation with very few connections to the wider working class. In reality it is a socialist/communist propaganda organisation. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>, at its height in 2003, united the vast majority of the Left in Scotland, had over a thousand members, won 128,026 votes in the Holyrood election, gained six <acronym title="Members of the Scottish Parliament">MSPs</acronym> and had 2 councillors. It was a party of socialist unity, unlike today when it is an organisation for socialist unity.</p>
<p>When you attempt to organise amongst the wider working class you come under all the immediate political pressures, as well as having to face up to the legacies of past Left traditions. We live in a <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state with a deep-seated imperialist legacy, and where our class has been in retreat in the face of a Capitalist Offensive since 1975. </p>
<p>So, if we are to engage meaningfully amongst the wider class, we have to acknowledge this, and develop a strategy to prevent socialists/communists being dragged back, and to find new openings that enable us to advance both the case and the struggle for a genuine socialist/communist alternative.  This means forming definite political platforms. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> is a platform in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>; the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> was part of a platform (Workers Unity) in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. So let’s compare our roles in trying to build wider principled socialist unity.</p>
<p>Now, just as Nick points out that the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> has already made many of the criticisms of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and Socialist Party that I raised in my critique, so I will point out that the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> publicly raised criticisms of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Executive’s handling of the Tommy Sheridan affair, which he quite rightly criticises. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> was the only political organisation to oppose, in principle, socialists’ resort to the bourgeois courts to get legal rulings on how they conduct themselves. </p>
<p>The split, which eventually emerged on the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Executive, was about the tactical advisability of a resort to the courts, not against the principle. The Executive, having unanimously warned against such a course of action in this particular case, came to an agreement with Sheridan, who insisted on ignoring this advice. In this agreement, he was allowed to stand down as <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Convenor in order to pursue his court case as an individual. The Executive hoped this would remove the pressure upon the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> itself. </p>
<p>This was extremely naïve, showing little understanding of how the state operates. In the case of the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/<acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>, they still haven’t learned this lesson, as their misguided resort to the courts to defend four victimised activists in UNISON has recently highlighted. Back in 2006, the Scottish courts made it quite clear that they made no distinction between the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> and the activities of its most prominent member. It jailed Alan McCombes for refusing to hand over party minutes covering the Executive decisions on the handling of the Sheridan affair. </p>
<p>This led to a public split on the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>’s Executive Committee, between those who wanted to continue with Sheridan’s case in the bourgeois courts, and those who could now see that the state held the whip hand. Sheridan was asked to abandon this particularly flawed and potentially disastrous course of action. Unfortunately, with the encouragement of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/IS &#8211; Sheridan went on regardless, resulting in a split in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. They refused to attend the post-trial Conference organised to address the deep-seated differences, which had emerged in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>.  Solidarity has been little more than a political ‘marriage of convenience’. You only have to look at the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>’s continued organisational separation in England, Wales (and Ireland/Northern Ireland) to understand this. </p>
<p>Certainly, mistakes had also been be made by the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Executive majority, but these could have been rectified. Indeed, the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> initiated motion to condemn the resort to bourgeois courts and newspapers to deal with differences amongst socialists was passed at the post-split <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> Conference in 2006.</p>
<p>Ironically, the one issue, which played no part in the split, was the territorial organisational basis of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. The left nationalist Sheridanistas (now the Democratic Green Socialist platform) joined with the Left unionist <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/IS in Solidarity. The Left nationalist influenced (now former) <acronym title="International Socialist Movement">ISM</acronym>, along with the Left unionist and carelessly named Solidarity platform (!)  (<acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>), and the republican socialist <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> stayed with the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. The left nationalist Scottish Republican Socialist Movement left the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> to urge support for the <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym>, whilst the Left unionist <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> ended up telling people to vote New Labour in the recent Euro-elections. Yes, a sorry mess!</p>
<p>Now, if ever there was an opportunity for the British Left to make some headway in Scotland, the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> split this should have been it. However, the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>/<acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> had already sabotaged the Socialist Alliances in England and Wales, whilst the final coup-de-grace was administered by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>, when it decided to move over to pastures green in Respect. Losing support there to Galloway and his allies (the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> seemed to have learned nothing about cultivating celebrity politics in Solidarity) they then sabotaged Respect. Perhaps, the one thing Nick and I could agree on, is that a particular organisational form &#8211; Scottish or British &#8211; provides no guarantee of principled socialist unity!  That has to be fought out on the basis of principled politics and democratic methods.</p>
<p>Now, some time after the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s advocacy of giving no support to either the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> or Solidarity (to my knowledge it no longer had any members involved at this stage), it came up with its own Campaign for a Marxist Party (<acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym>). Here surely, given the balance of political forces (much more favourable to the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, than say to the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> or <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in the old Socialist Alliance, the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in Respect, or the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> in No2EU) it should have been able to make some real headway in advancing its own brand of socialist/communist unity politics &#8211; the organisational unity of self-declared Marxists in an all-Britain (<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>?) party. </p>
<p>However, as every non-<acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> report on the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> has shown (see <cite>New Interventions</cite>), the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> played an analogous role to the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in its front organisations. And, just as in the case of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>, there has been no honest attempt to account politically for the demise of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> project in this respect. Instead, we have been given personalised attacks &#8211; once again shades of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>.  From the outside, it looks as if the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> was just attempting a new recruiting manoeuvre &#8211; much like the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>.</p>
<p>Now the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> certainly organised on an all-Britain basis, including the Critique/Marxist Forum group in Glasgow. Yet, far from bringing about greater unity, the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> experience has only resulted in greater disunity!  Nick I’m sure witnessed much of this, and I would think it unlikely that he was entirely happy with the way the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> conducted itself. However, this wasn’t an accidental one-off. </p>
<p>Before Nick became involved in the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, there had been an all-Britain <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, which included the Red Republicans (including myself), the Campaign for a Federal Republic, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and the <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym>. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>, in alliance with the <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym>, decided to marginalise those who disagreed with their own ‘federal British republican’ position.  In Scotland, federal British republicans were a minority in the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, but were still well represented on our Scottish Committee. In England, federal republicans were in a majority, but the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> acted to ensure there were no non-federal republicans on the ‘organising committee’ there (in reality very little organising had gone on).  </p>
<p>Their idea was to refashion the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> into an organisation, which would intervene with the ‘federal British republican’ line in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> had no wider role for the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> in England. They saw their job as conducting Left British unionist ‘missionary work’ in Scotland only.</p>
<p>A rather unpleasant all-Britain <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> meeting was held in London, and through the votes of <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> members, the majority of whom had never lifted a finger for the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, they won the day. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> in Scotland decided it had had enough of the bureaucratic manoeuvring and withdrew. Even the Scottish members of the Campaign for a Federal Republic members joined with the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> majority in Scotland, and together we constituted ourselves as the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> (Scotland).</p>
<p>It is not even necessary to accept my interpretation of these particular events to make a political assessment of the consequences of the split. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> now only existed in Scotland. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym> were attempting to link up with the very Left unionist (and social imperialist) <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>, and the Glasgow Critique group which still had members in Scotland, to build a new Left unionist platform within the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. An additional advantage was the support they had in England (and Wales). </p>
<p>So, which of the two platforms was able to advance in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>? Using Nick’s argument about the obvious superiority of all-Britain political organisations it should have been the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and its allies. Yet this wasn’t the case, despite the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s hope of also winning the support of other Left unionist organisations in the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>, such as the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> (<cite>Weekly Worker</cite> assiduously tried to court Neil Davidson, the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>’s leading theoretician in Scotland, then advancing a strong Left unionist politics.)  </p>
<p>Now, it could possibly be argued, from a <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> viewpoint, that the task of winning over the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> to ‘principled’ British Left organisational unity was just too big a task in the face of the opposition. However, then the fight conducted by the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and its allies should have at least solidified a more united pro-British tendency in Scotland. However, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> soon fell out with the <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> and, after the <acronym title="Campaign for a Marxist Party">CMP</acronym> debacle, with the <acronym title="Revolutionary Democratic Group">RDG</acronym>, also leaving members of the Glasgow Critique/Marxist Forum split! And Nick wonders why I think supporters of British Left unity tend to mirror the bureaucratic methods utilised by the British state!</p>
<h3>The historical basis for ‘internationalism from below’</h3>
<p>The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> is not just any old state. It was once at the centre of the world’s largest empire <q>upon which the sun never set</q>. Today, it forms the principle ally of <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> imperialism, the dominant power in the world. Today, the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> is ‘Hapsburg Austria’ to the <acronym title="United States of America">USA</acronym>’s ‘Tsarist Russia’. </p>
<p>For the greater part of their political lives, Marx and Engels argued that socialists should make opposition to the Romanov/Hapsburg counter-revolutionary alliance fundamental to their revolutionary project. Support for the Polish struggle to gain political independence, particularly from the Russian and Austrian Empires, was central to Marx and Engels’ strategy. Engels held on to this perspective until the end of his life, opposing the young Rosa Luxemburg on Polish independence, in the process. Socialists need to adopt a similar strategy today towards the <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperial alliance.</p>
<p>It took some time before Marx and Engels came to an understanding of the best method needed to unite socialists organisationally to promote revolution and struggle against reaction and counter-revolution. However, they outlined their most developed position within the First International, when, significantly, they had to confront the British Left of their day. This tendency tried to uphold a ‘one-state/one-party’ stance, when they denied the Irish the right to form their own national organisation within the International. In arguing against a prominent British First International member, Engels argued that:-</p>
<blockquote><p>The position of Ireland with regard to England was not that of an equal, but that of Poland with regard to Russia&#8230; What would be said if the Council called upon Polish sections to acknowledge the supremacy of a Council sitting in Petersburg, or upon Prussian Polish, North Schleswig {Danish} and Alsatian sections to submit to a Federal Council in Berlin&#8230; that was not Internationalism, but simply preaching to them submission to the yoke&#8230; and attempting to justify and perpetuate the dominion of the conqueror under the cloak of Internationalism.  It was sanctioning the belief, only too common amongst English {British} working men, that they were superior beings compared to the Irish, and as much an aristocracy as the mean whites of the Slave States considered themselves to be with regard to the Negroes.</p></blockquote>
<p>The Second International was formed as the High Imperialism of European dominant-nationality states (German, French and Russian) and top-down imperial national identity sates (British and Belgian) were in the ascendancy. The Second International abandoned Marx and Engels’ ‘internationalism from below’ principle. They adopted a ‘one state/one party’ organisational principle instead, which soon became the conduit for social chauvinist and social imperialist thinking within the social democratic movement. </p>
<p>Luxemburg and Lenin both accepted this new organisational principle. Luxemburg thought, though, that dominant nation chauvinism, which she still recognised, could be combatted by pushing for all-round democratic reforms, without regard to the specific nationalities in any particular state (albeit, as Lenin noticed, with the inconsistent qualification that, after the revolution, Poles should enjoy political autonomy). </p>
<p>Lenin also recognised the dominant nation social chauvinism and social imperialism found in the Second International, but thought this could best be combated through the 1896, Second International Congress decision to uphold ‘the right of nations to self determination’. Lenin thought, though, that any need to actually fight to implement this right was constantly being undermined by ongoing capitalist development, which he thought led to greater working class unity. Furthermore, after any future revolution, national self-determination would not be required, since workers would then want to unite together, initially within the existing state territorial frameworks, after these had been suitably transformed. </p>
<p>However, mainstream Second International figures, as well as Lenin, went on to consider various exceptions to both these organisational and political principles.  In the case of some of the major constituent Second International parties, support was sometimes given to non-state parties in other states (often ones in competition with their own imperial bourgeoisies!). In this way the <acronym title="Polish Socialist Party">PPS</acronym> (Poland) and <acronym title="Irish Republican Socialist Party">IRSP</acronym> (Ireland) were able to gain official recognition as Second International Congress delegates.  </p>
<p>Lenin, in contrast, tended to support the exercise of self-determination retrospectively, only after he had recognised its political significance, e.g. Norway in 1905, Ireland in 1916.  Lenin’s refusal to recognise the real political significance of Left-led national movements within the Russian Empire from 1917 (e.g. Finland and Ukraine), contributed to the isolation of the Revolution, and also to the burgeoning Great Russian bureaucratic character of the new <acronym title="Union of Soviet Socialist Republics">USSR</acronym>.  </p>
<p>Luxemburg’s refusal to get socialists to fight for the leadership of national democratic movements contributed even more to the particular political marginalisation of socialists in Poland, compared say to those ostensibly less revolutionary Finnish socialists. They had been much more brutally crushed in the 1918 White counter-revolution in Finland, than the Polish socialists had been in the imperial backed nationalist revolution there. One reason why Finnish socialists and communists were able to rise from the ashes, is that were still remembered as leaders in the national struggle against Tsarist Russian and German occupation.</p>
<h3>The role of an ‘internationalism from below’ strategy in combating the current <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperial alliance</h3>
<p>Fast forward to today, and we can see the leading role of <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperialism in the world, promoting the interests of the global corporations. The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state has been awarded the North Atlantic franchise by the <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>. Here it operates as spoiler within the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> to prevent it emerging as an imperial competitor to the <acronym title="United States">US</acronym>. It can even designate Iceland a terrorist state! Through the Peace (or more accurately pacification) Process, <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> governments, in alliance with their own junior partners, successive Irish governments, have rolled back the challenge represented by the revolutionary nationalist challenge of the Republican Movement. </p>
<p>Sinn Fein is now a major partner in upholding British rule in ‘the Six Counties’ through their coalition with the reactionary unionist <acronym title="Democratic Unionist Party">DUP</acronym>. The ‘Peace Process’ was designed to create the best political environment to ensure that the global corporations can maximise their profits in Ireland.  This political strategy has been extended throughout these islands, by the policy of ‘Devolution-all-round’ &#8211; Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. </p>
<p>This strategy has easily tamed such constitutional nationalist parties as the <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym> and Plaid Cymru. The <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym>, for example, is pursuing a Devolution-Max policy to uphold Scottish business interests in an accepted global corporate dominated world. The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state strategy has the full support of the <acronym title="United States of America">USA</acronym>, the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym>, and trade union leaderships locked in ‘social partnerships’ with their governments and the employers.</p>
<p>The constitutionally unionist form of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state places the National Question at the heart of the democratic struggle.  Middle class nationalism is continually forced into compromises with unionism and imperialism. (At the height of British imperial world domination, the overwhelming majority of the Scottish and Welsh, and a significant section of the Irish middle classes, could be won over to acceptance of various hyphenated British identities &#8211; Scottish-British, Welsh-British and Irish-British &#8211; in their shared pursuit of imperial spoils). However, today’s <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym> support for the monarchy, and for Scottish regiments in the British imperial army, show that unionist/imperialist pressure can still have an impact.  Even the ‘independent’ Irish state has given Shannon Airport over to <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> imperial forces, particularly for ‘rendition’ flights. </p>
<p>Unfortunately, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> has only the most abstract understanding of the British unionist state. As yet, it doesn’t even fully comprehend the difference between a nation and a nationality. During the 1997 Devolution Referendum campaign, <cite>Weekly Worker</cite>denied there was such a thing as a Scottish nation, claiming there was only a British nation, in which there lives a Scottish nationality. The existence of a wider Scottish nation, and not just a narrower ethnic Scots nationality, can easily be demonstrated in the well-known Scottish names of Sean Connery, Tom Conti, Shireen Nanjiani and Omar Saeed. </p>
<p>The logic of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s position, if it had upheld its own particular version of national self-determination, should have been to argue for the 1997 referendum ballot to be confined to (ethnic) Scots.  This would of course brought it into line with the far right nationalist, Siol nan Gaidheal! The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> also got itself into so many knots through promoting its own particular sect-front, ‘The Campaign for Genuine Self Determination’, that it buried any report of its end-of-campaign public meeting and rally in Glasgow.  This meeting was certainly entertaining, but hardly a triumph for <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> politics! </p>
<p>Indeed the beginnings of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym>’s political decline in Scotland can be identified with this particular meeting, which it was so reluctant to report on. I made an extended political assessment, which was sent to <cite>Weekly Worker</cite> to review. It declined to do so.</p>
<p>However, the confusion between nation and nationality has been taken to greater lengths in ‘the Six Counties’. Here Jack Conrad has identified a 75% Irish-British nation (!), scoring somewhat higher in the nation stakes than Scotland. The fact that Irish-British nationality identification went into rapid retreat after the Irish War of Independence is just ignored. </p>
<p>What undoubtedly exists in the ‘Six Counties’ today is an Ulster-British identity, buttressed by official Unionism and unofficial Loyalism alike. However, this relatively new nationality identification isn’t fixed either. There are a minority of Ulster-British who would happily become fully integrated into the British unionist and imperial state. The majority in the <acronym title="Ulster Unionist Party">UUP</acronym>, <acronym title="Democratic Unionist Party">DUP</acronym> and <acronym title="Traditional Unionist Voice">TUV</acronym>, still want to maintain Stormont and other Northern Irish statelet institutions to hopefully ensure continued Protestant Unionist ascendancy. An ultra-reactionary minority has contemplated declaring <acronym title="unilateral declaration of independence">UDI</acronym>  (Rhodesia style) to form an independent Ulster state, through ethnic cleansing (or, as the relevant <acronym title="Ulster Defence Association">UDA</acronym> document puts it &#8211; ‘nullification’). They all, of course, proudly champion the British imperial legacy.</p>
<p>Ironically, there has been a limited rise of British-Irishness in ‘the 26 counties’, particularly in ‘Dublin 4’, amongst former Official Republicans and a new wave if ‘revisionist historians’. Significantly, this usually goes along with support for the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and the <acronym title="United States of America">USA</acronym> in its current ‘anti-terrorist’ (i.e. imperial) adventures. These people represent a similar phenomenon to the Euston Manifesto group, formed in 2006 along with others, by former <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> member, Alan Johnson. The <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>, of course, has gone further even than the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym> in its apologetics for working class Loyalist organisations (anticipating its similar attitude to Zionist Labour organisations), so it is not surprising that it has given birth to strong social unionist and imperialist tendencies.  Therefore, as long as the <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> champions the ‘nation’ rights of this particularly reactionary nationality, it is in danger of following the path of the <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> and the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>.</p>
<p>Now, the majority of the real Irish-British in ‘the 26 counties’ did eventually become Irish themselves, despite the undoubted barriers posed by the Catholic confessional nature of the state there. This development shows the possibilities of creating Irish national unity, especially if full nationality and religious equality is promoted. </p>
<p>The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> appreciates the real nature of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state, and the strategy being pursued by its ruling class to contain potentially threatening national democratic movements. These can take on a republican form in their opposition to the anti-democratic Crown Powers soon wielded against any effective opposition. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> also recognises the need to supplement this by engagement with major social issues. This social republicanism (which needs to be developed by communists into conscious socialist republicanism) isn’t just an added-on extra. The fight against jobs and housing discrimination in the Civil Right Movement, and against the poll tax in Scotland, soon became linked with the national and (latent) republican movements in their respective countries.</p>
<p>When the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> argues for a challenge to the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state and to its anti-democratic Crown Powers in Scotland, this stems from a recognition that republican political consciousness is currently higher here (itself a reflection of the importance of the National Question). By way of analogy, in the 1980’s, the wider working class appreciated the more advanced class consciousness of the <acronym title="National Union of Mineworkers">NUM</acronym> and recognised they were in the vanguard of the fight, not just to save pits, but against the Thatcher government. The Great Miners’ Strike was itself triggered off by independent action. The job of socialists soon became to organise effective wider solidarity, and generalise this into a wider political struggle against Thatcher. </p>
<p>If socialist republicans in Scotland can take the lead in the political struggle against the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state, the task of socialists in these islands becomes something similar &#8211; to build solidarity and to extend the challenge by breaking each link in the unionist chain. Whether we end up with independent democratic republics (and only weaken imperialism &#8211; nevertheless a better basis for future progress than the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> imperial state which exists at present), or are able to move forward to a federation of European socialist republics, depends on the ability of socialists/communists to build ever widening independent class organisation, culminating in workers’ councils. </p>
<p>Abstention from the democratic struggle on the grounds it isn’t specifically ‘socialist’ would be equivalent to abstention in supporting workers fighting for increased wages, on the grounds that they weren’t fighting against the wages system.  Socialists/communists can only gain a wider audience by participating in all the economic, social, cultural and political (democratic) struggles facing our class.  To do this effectively, socialists throughout these islands need to build on the basis of ‘internationalism from below’</p>
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		<title>The Need for Socialist Unity</title>
		<link>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2009/07/10/the-need-for-socialist-unity/</link>
		<comments>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2009/07/10/the-need-for-socialist-unity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Jul 2009 19:10:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RCN</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Elections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Author: All]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Author: Allan Armstrong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AWL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[commune]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CPB]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CPGB]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CWI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Declan Ganley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Die Linke]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[EACL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[EU]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Euro Elections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fourthwrite]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Socialist Network]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joaquin Reymond]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Labour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libertas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lisbon Treaty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Make Greed History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[No One Is Illegal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NPA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[People before Profit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[RCN]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Banner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Respect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rifondazione Comunista]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Save Our Schools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sinn Fein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Socialist Unity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Solidarity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SSP]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Virginia de la Siega]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WUAG]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Editors Note: still to do footnotes links and tables A contribution from Allan Armstrong of the Republican Communist Network. This is immediately followed by a supplement analysing the European election results, which assesses the current balance of political forces in the EU. In Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales the main lesson of the 2009 European [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Editors Note: still to do footnotes links and tables</strong></p>
<h2>A contribution from Allan Armstrong of the Republican Communist Network. This is immediately followed by a supplement analysing the European election results, which assesses the current balance of political forces in the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym>.</h2>
<p>In Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales the main lesson of the 2009 European elections is clear – we need Socialist unity. In Ireland, this is needed to take some of the impressive gains just made to an altogether higher level &#8211; especially those of the Socialist Party (<acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>), but also by People before Profit (<acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>) and the Workers and Unemployed Action Group (<acronym title="Workers and Unemployed Action Group">WUAG</acronym>).</p>
<p>This will not be easy, given past political sectarian divisions, the continued pull towards Left populism, and the usually unacknowledged political significance of the partition of Ireland, which both the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> and the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> downplay. Thus, for example, despite the electoral successes in ‘The 26 Counties’, Socialists vacated the electoral terrain altogether in ‘The Six Counties’.</p>
<p>There are independent Socialist groups beyond the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> in Ireland, such as the Irish Socialist Network, as well as journals to promote debate between Socialists and with Republicans – <cite>Red Banner</cite> and <cite>Fourthwrite</cite>. They may find some difficulty being heard in the face of the likely triumphalist clamour coming from the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> after their recent electoral successes. Nevertheless, the job of promoting principled unity needs to be undertaken now, even if it does not bear fruit until sometime later.</p>
<p>Very soon, the Irish ruling class is likely to want to organise a rerun of the Lisbon Treaty referendum. Given that Eurosceptic Libertas leader, Declan Ganley, seems to have thrown in the towel, after failing to win a Euro-seat in North West Ireland, the responsibility for opposing this neo-liberal treaty falls much more squarely upon Socialists. The reactions of Sinn Fein (previously opposed to the Treaty) and Labour (previously supportive) will be interesting. This could provide Socialists with real opportunities to make their mark on Irish national politics.</p>
<p>However, this will mean striving for real Socialist unity, if the whole of Ireland, not just Dublin, is to be covered properly. The ability of the <acronym title="Workers and Unemployed Action Group">WUAG</acronym> to organise effectively in small town Ireland (in County Tipperary) shows the possibilities. Furthermore, it is to be hoped that Irish Socialists can take a leaf out of the French <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym>, and organise an internationalist campaign against the neo-liberal Lisbon Treaty.</p>
<p>In England, Respect, which provided the main Socialist Euro-election challenge in England in 2004, albeit in Left populist colours, had already split and then dropped out , before the 2009 Euro-election. There is also a warning here for the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>’s ‘People before Profit’ in Ireland, which is still following the Left populist strategy now abandoned by their comrades in Britain, at least for elections, after the fiasco involving Respect councillors in Tower Hamlets, and the tail-ending of George Galloway.</p>
<p>Furthermore, in the context of more direct action by workers and communities facing draconian service cuts (e.g. the Glasgow Save Our Schools campaign), there is an increasing possibility that the Mainstream parties, holding council office, will victimise Socialist councillors, who identify strongly with such actions. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> has already had this experience with Jim Bollan, suspended for nine months by <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym>-controlled West Dumbarton Council.  So the pressures on Socialist councillors (and trade union activists) will be considerable.</p>
<p>The demise of a once more united Respect allowed their now vacated 2004 electoral space to be contested by others in the recent Euro-election. Scargill’s <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym> made a pitch for the Left celebrity vote, whilst the openly Europhobic, Left nationalist and populist No2EU, tried to appeal to some of the same chauvinist sentiments as the Right populists.</p>
<p>Wales Forward provided the main Socialist challenge in Wales in 2004; the Left unionist, Respect came a poor second. Both presented themselves in Left populist colours. There was debate in Wales Forward over how Socialists should address the national issue. After Wales Forward’s demise, members split between its Left nationalist component, most going into <span lang="cy">Plaid Cymru</span>, and its Left unionist, mainly former Labour component.  The two Socialist slates in the 2009 Euro-election in Wales, the <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym> and No2EU, had nothing to say on the Welsh national issue, and confined their appeals to largely English-speaking South Wales.</p>
<p>The resurgence of British Right nationalism, represented by the Conservatives becoming the first party in Wales, <acronym title="United Kingdom Independence Party">UKIP</acronym> taking their first seat, and the <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym> taking their largest % increase in the vote, highlights the need for Welsh Socialists to unite to more effectively to counter British chauvinism. The recent production of a <span lang="cy"><cite>Celyn</cite></span>, a magazine emulating <cite>Scottish Left Review</cite>, and involving debate between Welsh Socialists from different backgrounds and in different political organisations, represents a tentative first step.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, the current dire political situation, throughout the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>, could well lead to a further retreat into Left populism amongst the existing divided Socialists here. The <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> looks as if it wants to draw others into another Left unity campaign against the <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym>, shifting the focus away from the Mainstream parties.  However, it is these parties, especially New Labour, which have largely been responsible for creating the economic and social crisis that has allowed the Fascists to emerge into the limelight in the first place.</p>
<p>In the late 1970’s, the old Anti-Nazi League (<acronym title="Anti-Nazi League">ANL</acronym>) adopted this same Left populist approach, invoking Second World War, British opposition to the German Nazi menace. Whilst making some contribution to the demise of the National Front (<acronym title="National Front">NF</acronym>), the <acronym title="Anti-Nazi League">ANL</acronym> completely failed to mobilise to defend those Irish victims of the very British, Union Jack-waving Fascism of the loyalist paramilitaries and their ‘mainland’ supporters. Furthermore, this very British Fascism had the behind-the-scenes support of the British state. Irish Republicanism then represented a real threat to the British ruling class.</p>
<p>The <acronym title="Anti-Nazi League">ANL</acronym> also failed to offer any political challenge to the sitting Callaghan Labour government, which had inflicted pay restraints and cuts under the Social Contract, thus creating the situation in which the Fascist <acronym title="National Front">NF</acronym> could thrive.  It was the Thatcher’s incoming Conservative government that finally halted the rise of the <acronym title="National Front">NF</acronym>, after she resorted to Right populist, racist rhetoric about being “swamped by people of a different culture”.  The prospect of rolling back the current <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym> electoral advance, by means of another Conservative, or a returned New Labour (unlikely it is true) government, is hardly a very reassuring prospect.</p>
<p>The Socialist Party (<acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>) in England and Wales, and its International Socialist (<acronym title="International Socialist">IS</acronym>) outrider inside Solidarity in Scotland, offer another road to Left unity, which also needs to be questioned. They do want to build a political alternative to New Labour, but by further developing the bureaucratic, Left British nationalist, European electoral front, No2EU. They want to merge it with the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>’s own Campaign for a New Workers Party to form a new party based on the existing undemocratic, bureaucrat-dominated trade unions &#8211; in other words, an Old Labour Party mark 2. They also hope to win over whatever sections of the Labour Left still show any life. This is the current French Left Front and the German <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> approach. <span lang="it">Rifondazione Comunista</span> and Left Unity in Spain have already made similar attempts, with predictable results.</p>
<p>There may be critical analyses going on amongst members inside the bureaucratically centralised <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>. How has the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> become so marginalised and how did the Socialist Party end up inside the politically suspect No2EU project? These parties’ internal regimes do not encourage much independent thinking. Nevertheless, there is also a good number of Socialists outside the two largest British Socialist organisations, some of whom gathered last September as the Convention of the Left. So, it is to be hoped that together with any critical voices there may be inside the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>, independent voices advocating principled Socialist Unity can yet emerge. Any ‘red’ shoots need to be encouraged.</p>
<p>The need for Socialist unity is most starkly demonstrated in Scotland, where the Socialist vote fell from 5.2% in 2004 to 3.8% (on the most optimistic interpretation, which includes the <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym> vote) or 1.8% (if the Scottish Socialist Party and Solidarity votes alone are considered).</p>
<p>Furthermore, despite the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>’s considerable achievement in winning Socialist unity in Scotland in 2003, attempts to recreate this unity today may prove very hard, given the impact of the past, and likely future court case (involving Tommy Sheridan, and both <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> and Solidarity members) and the acrimonious split.</p>
<p>The political decline of Solidarity was demonstrated, by a section of its members’ involvement in the Left British nationalist bureaucratic, Europhobic, No2EU campaign (with its ill-fitting, Left Scottish nationalist, Sheridan bolt-on). However, it is a good sign that sections of the Solidarity membership refused to go along with this. Socialist unity was discussed at Solidarity’s first post Euro-election Scottish Council meeting. It remains to be seen how much this mirrors the political manoeuvrings of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> <abbr title="headwuarters">HQs</abbr> in England, and how much this represents genuine new thinking.</p>
<p>The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> still remains divided between a more outward looking wing, which wants to get involved at all levels of politics, and understands the need for wider Socialist unity, involving other political groups; and those, mainly, but not exclusively from Glasgow, who are still suffering from the traumas of the previous court case and the split. They believe that the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> can ignore other political groups, particularly Solidarity, and build itself as the dominant force in Scotland, mainly by working in local campaigns. Some appear to see the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> as little more than a political and social network for Socialists in Scotland, with most of their contributions made on the electronic media – a sort of virtual party.</p>
<p>Therefore, when the decision was finally, if belatedly, taken, to stand in the 2009 Euro-election, in the face of this internal opposition, this represented a real advance for the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. Even better was the fact that, despite the differences between those for and against standing, this debate was conducted in a comradely manner in all public party arenas (let’s leave aside website discussions dominated by the virtual Socialists!).</p>
<p>Furthermore, the biggest gain, agreed by Conference, after the decision to stand was won, was the unanimous vote to campaign as part of the European Anti-Capitalist Alliance. This motion was presented by the <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym> and backed by Frontline, who also invited a French <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> speaker, Virginia de la Siega, to address Conference. During the Euro-election campaign itself, the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> then brought over another <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> speaker, Joaquin Reymond, to address public meetings in Dundee and Edinburgh and Glasgow.</p>
<p>However, Left populism also surfaced during the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>’s election campaign. This came about due to the decision, taken after the Conference, to launch a ‘Make Greed History’ campaign. Originally conceived as a way to attack the bankers and others responsible for the economic crisis, this perhaps had greater purchase when the Westminster <acronym title="Member of Parliament">MP</acronym>s’ expenses scandal broke out. However, the essentially populist nature of this slogan was highlighted when even Gordon Brown and David Cameron (hypocritically) promised to deal with their own <q>greedy <acronym title="Member of Parliament">MP</acronym>s</q>.</p>
<p>The overall focus of the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> election campaign, should have been the ‘Make the Bosses Pay for Their Crisis’, put forward by our alliance partners, the French <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym>. It could then have been supplemented by the much more specific, ‘A Workers’ <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym> on a Workers Wage’, once the expenses scandal broke. Given that our former <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> <acronym title="Member of Scottish Parliament">MSP</acronym>s actually implemented this policy, when they were in the devolved Holyrood parliament between 1999 and 2007, this could have made a lot more impact.</p>
<p>The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>’s back up materials and meetings should have drawn potential supporters to our full politics, summed up by, ‘Make Capitalism History, Make Socialism the Future’. However, one problem here is that there is no unified understanding within the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> of what constitutes socialism, or even capitalism for that matter! Developing our theory and furthering this debate is a no. 1 priority. The <acronym title="Republican Communist Network">RCN</acronym>, for example, is beginning this very necessary work, hoping to work with others, such as The Commune group, which has members in England and Wales.</p>
<p>Now, although 10,404 people do not represent many votes, they do represent a lot of Socialists whom the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> needs to actively draw to the party. Unlike the <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym> or Solidarity, the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> still has meaningful regularly meeting organisation on the ground, a vibrant website, and a paper to build for the future. The main task is to create a new generation of committed, knowledgeable and engaged Socialists, who can show the way through this serious and developing, economic, social and political crisis. This means an ability to highlight, not only the dead end represented by neo-liberalism, but that other weapon in capitalism’s armoury &#8211; neo-Keynesianism. The current crisis is likely to deepen, even when governments are reluctantly forced to make further interventions in the economy. We should be preparing now for this eventuality, so that Socialists can make real advances in the future.</p>
<p>The ‘Make Greed History’ campaign might only have been a temporary feature of the Euro-election, but it appears to have taken on new legs. It seems to have provided a definite Left populist focus inside the party. This would appear to go along with a totally dismissive attitude towards everyone in Solidarity. This is not helpful when key sections of the wider working class appreciate the need for Socialist unity.</p>
<p>The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> needs to welcome moves made by others to promote greater Socialist unity, even if some of these people have sometimes previously promoted disunity. People can learn from their mistakes. Each unity initiative needs to properly discussed and assessed. We need to show patience and diplomacy, whilst also ensuring that any Socialist unity is established on a principled basis. This unity does not mean an unprincipled stitch-up, pretending that nothing has happened in the past.</p>
<p>Dire though the consequences of the split have been, there have been important lessons we have learned. First, Socialists can only make permanent gains by abandoning celebrity politics. The evidence for this comes, not only from the attempted promotion of Solidarity as the Tommy Sheridan Party, but of Respect as the George Galloway Party and the <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym> as the Arthur Scargill Party.  Any united socialist organisation needs to be thoroughly democratic and treat all members as equals.</p>
<p>Future Socialist unity must be thoroughly internationalist, offering support to all workers (or would-be workers) living here – not just those deemed to be ‘subjects of the Crown’. International working class unity is central to principled Socialist unity at this time. This means opposing both Left British and Left Scottish nationalism. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>has become increasingly Scottish internationalist and republican socialist in its politics. These gains also need to be defended in a wider political context.</p>
<p>When it comes to proposals for joint action, we should avoid being panicked by the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> into pretended threats of a Fascist takeover. There will be no <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym> ‘March on London’, far less Edinburgh or Glasgow. Those at the sharp end of <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym>/loyalist attacks will mainly be individual migrant workers. This is why it was so important to oppose No2EU, with its thinly disguised racist opposition to ‘social dumping’. Support for ‘No One Is Illegal’ allows us to come to the help of all those migrant workers, legal or illegal, who face either <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym> attacks or state persecution.</p>
<p>Furthermore, there could be a rise in loyalist sectarian/racist attacks in Scotland, in the future, following recent attacks in Northern Ireland, and the new Mainstream political alliance on the Conservative and Unionist Right. The <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>’s equation of Fascism with German Nazism, and the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>/<acronym title="International Socialist">IS</acronym> ‘a plague on both your camps’ stances, are not the ways to confront this particular prospect. The loyalist paramilitaries are very British Fascists. They are the active upholders of the British state and promoters of racism and sectarianism. Their victims need defended and any non-sectarian Republican opposition supported.</p>
<p>Socialists do need to make more active links with trade unions, but unlike the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>/<acronym title="International Socialist">IS</acronym>, this does not mean making concessions to union bureaucrats, no matter how Left-talking. Alongside a ‘Workers’ <acronym title="Member of Parliament">MP</acronym> on a Workers’ Wage’, we also need to see ‘Trade Union Representatives on a Workers’ Wage’, and subject to regular election. Just as important is the building of a new rank and file movement in the unions that sees sovereignty lying amongst the members in their workplaces, not in the bureaucrat-controlled head offices, or Broad Left-dominated Executives. Workers need to be able to take independent action whenever needed, with the aim of building enough support to defy the anti-democratic anti-trade union laws.</p>
<p>Given the difficulties of uniting Socialists within each of their respective nations &#8211; Ireland, England, Wales and Scotland &#8211; we face considerable difficulties uniting Socialists from all these countries. Yet, the British and Irish ruling classes are united in promoting the interests of corporate capital in these islands. Their agreed political strategy involves the continued promotion of the ‘Peace Process’ in ‘The Six Counties’, closer cooperation between the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and Irish governments, and developing ‘Devolution-all-round’, all to create the optimum conditions for capitalist profitability. It also involves them giving open (British government) and tacit (Irish government) support for continued <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> imperialist war drives.</p>
<p>Nor, is it surprising that much of this strategy has the open or tacit support of the British, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh trade union bureaucrats, through ‘social partnerships’. These have rendered trade unions almost completely ineffective as a means to defend their members. Trade union leaders now ask, as a way to counter the current economic crisis, that bosses accept their share of the pain too, in return for workers being prepared to accept massive job losses, pay cuts and reduced social spending. No wonder the bosses are ‘laughing all the way to the banks’ (now, of course, protected at our expense, by their political friends in government).</p>
<p>The British and Irish ruling class strategy can not be opposed successfully by means of the organisational model – one state/one party – supported by the parties of the British Left (and their Irish satellites) &#8211; the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>, <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>, <acronym title="Communist Party of Britain">CPB</acronym>, <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> and <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym>, etc.. Although in Britain this usually means forgetting that the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state does not consist solely of Britain, but also includes ‘The Six Counties’ of Ireland.</p>
<p>Clearly this model is useless, when the nation itself is divided, as in the case of Ireland. This tends to lead to the acceptance of partitionist politics, which plays into the hands of both the British and Irish ruling classes. Furthermore, even in its attenuated ‘one British state’ version, one-state/one party advocates have been unable to consistently counter British chauvinism, or to appreciate the democratic aspect of the emergence of national movements in Scotland and Wales.</p>
<p>Both the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym> affiliated <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>, and the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>, formally exist as a single party in Ireland but, in practice, follow partitionist politics, especially in their accommodation to continued British rule in ‘The Six Counties’. The <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym> in Britain has provided different degrees of autonomy for their members in 	Scotland (Scottish Militant Labour, the International Socialist Movement – which then left the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym> &#8211; then the International Socialists-Scotland), but nothing equivalent in Wales. The <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> appears to have no autonomous organisation in Scotland, merely expecting its resident members to implement the British line. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Great Britain">CPGB</acronym> has flirted with the notion of constituting itself as the <acronym title="Communist Party of the United Kingdom">CPUK</acronym> to cover Northern Ireland. It is also prepared to contemplate repartition of ‘The Six Counties’. The <acronym title="Alliance for Workers' Liberty">AWL</acronym> share similar pro-British ideas, but as yet have not suggested reorganising themselves on an all-<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> basis.</p>
<p>This organisational problem is merely an aspect of a wider political problem. This can be seen by the British and Irish <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>s’ inability to offer a coordinated strategy to confront both the shared British and Irish ruling class political strategy for these islands. These two <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>s have a record of adapting to local circumstances in a way that produces glaring contradictions. Thus in Britain, they support an ‘independent socialist Scotland’, but merely a Welsh Assembly with more powers. In Ireland, they virtually ignore partition in their everyday politics and election material in ‘The 26 Counties’, whilst in ‘The Six Counties’ they have flirted with working class loyalists. The <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> also have no overall strategy to confront the British and Irish ruling class alliance.</p>
<p>Neither, though, is the largely ‘go-it-alone’ Left nationalism, which emerged in sections of both the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> and Solidarity, the answer. Any democratic and republican advance in Scotland can only be secured by similar advances in Ireland, Wales and England; just as a future socialism needs to spread internationally, if it is to survive.</p>
<p>The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> made the first small steps towards an alternative ‘internationalism from below’ approach, when it organised the Republican Socialist Convention last November.  This involved socialists from Scotland, Ireland, England and Wales. The <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym> will need to vigorously defend this ‘internationalism from below’ principle in any future, wider, Socialist unity discussions, both against any Left Scottish nationalist isolationists in our own (and Solidarity’s) ranks and, against the Left British nationalists who also figure prominently in Solidarity, especially the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym>. These two organisations have already brought about so much disunity with their top down bureaucratic attempts at imposing ‘unity’, which just mirror the methods of the British state. The <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> remains an imperial state, albeit a junior partner with the <acronym title="Unite States of America">USA</acronym>. There can be no ‘British road to socialism’, only a ‘break-up of the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> state and British Empire road to communism’.</p>
<p>However, genuine communism, following from an international socialist transition, means not total state control, but the end of wage slavery, in a society based on the principle of <q>from each according to their abilities; to each according to their needs</q> and <q>where the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all</q>.</p>
<h2>Supplement</h2>
<h3>The 2009 European Elections &#8211; a political assessment.</h3>
<p>The European elections provide us with a snapshot view of the current state of politics. The following analysis looks at the election results in Europe, the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> &amp; Ireland and, in a bit more detail, in Scotland, in order to identify some significant political trends.</p>
<h3>A) Europe</h3>
<h4>1)  The Mainstream</h4>
<h5>a)  Mainstream Right</h5>
<p>Despite the ongoing unresolved economic crisis, following the ‘Credit Crunch’, the main beneficiaries in the Euro-election have been those Mainstream Right parties belonging to the wider European Peoples Party (<acronym title="European Peoples Party">EPP</acronym>).</p>
<p>Right Centrists have traditionally been pro-business, drawing their support from the middle class, and upholding conservative values. At times, in the past, these parties have accepted pragmatic state intervention in the economy and social welfare measures. This phase of Right Centre politics was most associated with overlapping Butskellite Conservative/Labour and Christian Democratic/Social Democratic support for social market or mixed economy policies, from the late 1940’s to the mid 1970’s in the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>, and later in mainland Europe.</p>
<p>In response to capitalism’s crisis of profitability in the mid-1970’s, Mainstream Right parties, beginning with the British Conservatives, have moved to the neo-liberal economic policies aggressively pushed by corporate capital, sometimes supplemented by Right populist appeals to social conservatism, defending ‘family values’ and ‘national traditions’.</p>
<p>The parties of the <acronym title="European Peoples Party">EPP</acronym>, which made the biggest electoral gains in the Euro-election, currently hold office, either with other Mainstream Right parties or, in Merkel’s case, in a coalition with the Social Democrats. They gained 20 seats overall (1). Today, the dominant politics of this grouping stretches from the Right Centrism of parties like Merkel’s <acronym title="Christian Democratic Union">CDU</acronym>/<acronym title="Christian Social Union">CSU</acronym> to the Right populism of Berlusconi’s <acronym title="People of Freedom">PdL</acronym>. In between lies Sarkozy’s (2) UDM.</p>
<p>Until the ‘Credit Crunch’, these Mainstream Right governments were avidly pushing neo-liberal measures to further deregulate their economies and to roll back their own state’s social-market welfare provisions.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, despite a strongly shared commitment to the European Union and further political integration, coupled to neo-liberal economic measures, these Mainstream Right-led governments quickly took action in breach of <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> rules and neo-liberal orthodoxy.  As Sarkozy shamelessly argued, <q>The idea that markets were always right was mad… Laissez-faire is finished. The all-powerful market that always knows best is finished</q> (<acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> Observer, 26.9.08). It is difficult to imagine Brown, Darling or Mandelson being able to come out with such words.</p>
<p>Thus, faced with the possibility that the unfolding ‘Credit Crunch’ could undermine capitalism itself, Mainstream Right governing parties moved quickly to protect their countries’ perceived immediate national interests. They reassured domestic voters that they were prepared to intervene in the economy to ward off the economic chaos brought about by the previous deregulated ‘free market’ they had recently advocated.</p>
<p>Government intervention by such Mainstream Right parties is largely seen as a pragmatic response to the current economic crisis.  It does not raise any unwanted spectres of creeping state control in business circles. So most Mainstream Right-led governments have been able to make their economic policy adjustments in response to the economic crisis relatively easily, without having to look over their shoulders. Thus, for all those voters, especially the majority of the middle class still in reasonably secure jobs (for the present), but with some nagging doubts (for the future), a vote for this pragmatic Mainstream Right appeared to be a safe option.</p>
<p>Berlusconi’s <acronym title="People of Freedom">PdL</acronym> and Sarkozy’s UDM made substantial gains in this Euro-election &#8211; 16 and 11 seats respectively. Merkel’s <acronym title="Christian Democratic Union">CDU</acronym>/<acronym title="Christian Social Union">CSU</acronym> did lose 7 seats (its Social Democratic government coalition partners managed to hold on to theirs), but 5 of these were picked up by the pro-business <acronym title="Free Democrats">FDP</acronym>. Whilst currently benefiting from being in opposition, the <acronym title="Free Democrats">FDP</acronym> has often formed a coalition partner with the other Mainstream parties in the past.</p>
<p>However, a further deepening of the economic crisis could undermine the current complacency of the middle class, which, at present, leads them to look to minimal changes and for a ‘safe pair of hands on the tiller’. Italy provides us with an example of the likely trajectory of the Right, if the Right Centrist policies, currently being pursued by Merkel and others, are unable to hold the line.</p>
<p>Despite, the poor economic situation in Italy, Berlusconi’s Right populist <acronym title="People of Freedom">PdL</acronym>-led government has extended its hold, both in the 2008 Italian general election and the 2009 Euro-election. It has done this by increasing the big business hold on the state (most obviously by Berlusconi’s media companies), and by a barrage of public attacks on migrants. Berlusconi’s Right populist allies, the anti-migrant (and anti-Southern Italian) Northern League also made big gains in the election (+5 seats). Together, these parties have created a political climate that allows physical attacks (including murders), particularly upon Roma and African immigrants to occur, without much official challenge.</p>
<p>In this particular election, Italy has gone further Right than any other western European country, eliminating not only any official Communist/Socialist Left (3) opposition but also any independent Social Democratic and Green electoral presence in the European Parliament. The corporate capitalist ‘Americanisation’ of politics, (where the Republicans and Democrats form two wings of the ‘Business Party’) is now quite far advanced in Italy.</p>
<h5>b) Social Democratic/Labour Centre</h5>
<p>Many commentators thought that Social Democrat/Labour parties should do well in this first post-‘Credit Crunch’ election, now that neo-liberalism is discredited. A return to the pre-1980’s mixed economy, based on the Keynesian economics, very much associated with earlier Social Democratic/Labour parties, and maybe even a recommitment to social welfare, was briefly touted. The neo-Keynesian (i.e. capitalist) case for government intervention in the economy is so widely acknowledged (4), that it has even been adopted in the <acronym title="Unite States of America">USA</acronym> – first, very shame-facedly by Bush’s Republican government, now with more enthusiasm by Obama’s new Democrat government.</p>
<p>However, both the new <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> Democrat government, and the long standing British Labour government, have been quick to claim that those nationalisations, which they have reluctantly been forced to adopt, are merely temporary expedients. Those new nationalised companies have been left under their previous bosses’ control, with promises to reprivatise later, no doubt on very favourable terms.  Most bosses can hardly believe their luck, and are rapidly returning to awarding themselves big bonus payments and other perks.</p>
<p>The fact that the traditionally pro-business Mainstream Right was the main beneficiary in the European election will probably reinforce most sitting Social Democrat/Labour governments in seeing neo-Keynesian measures as being short lived. The enforced nationalisations are very definitely not being used to provide greater economic security for their workforce in the ongoing economic crisis. Their workforces are being subjected to redundancies, short-time working, pay, conditions and pension cuts for their workers, so these companies can be returned to private hands in a more profitable state (e.g. Chrysler in the <acronym title="Unite States of America">USA</acronym> and the Royal Bank of Scotland in the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>). Nor have these governments given any thought to using these nationalised companies’ existing production facilities and workforces to helping meet social needs in environmentally sustainable ways.</p>
<p>If, as is very likely, the current economic recession further deepens, governments may be forced to resort to much more comprehensive neo-Keynesian measures. However, any final abandonment of neo-liberalism, and more general acceptance of neo-Keynesianism, does not represent creeping socialism, as some Socialists still seem to believe. In today’s competitive global economy, such a strategy can only mean the state taking on even greater responsibility for implementing austerity measures, increased beggar-thy-neighbour protectionist policies and preparations for war &#8211; in other words not socialism &#8211; but state capitalism.</p>
<p>Ironically, Social Democratic/Labour governments have found it more difficult than the continental Mainstream Right to respond to the current economic crisis. Social Democratic/Labour leaders are now more cautious about moving away from neo-liberal non-interventionism. They fear the ending of their recently won big business and media backing, if seen to pursue neo-Keynesian interventionist policies too keenly. These leaders have also gained much better access to the spoils of office, as well as to very lucrative business patronage.</p>
<p>Furthermore, Social Democratic/Labour politicians not only call upon the working class to pay for ‘our share’ of the costs of the crisis, but actively pursue measures to ensure this happens. They use their links with the compliant trade unions to help them, e.g. through social partnerships in the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and Ireland. In contrast, any pleas these same politicians make, which suggest that bosses should shoulder some share of the costs of the crisis, remain pious calls not backed by any effective measures of enforcement. Therefore, it is not surprising that many previous Social Democratic/Labour working class voters now think these parties have little to offer in the current crisis. So they either abstain or look elsewhere to register their protest.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, sensing the unpopularity of existing Social Democratic/Labour governments, and realising their decreased ability to deliver a ‘bound and gagged’ working class, big business backers are turning back to the Mainstream Right parties, which appear to hold more immediate electoral promise.</p>
<p>However, even when existing Social Democratic/Labour parties are ousted from office, big business will still continue to exert pressure on them to defend their interests, when called upon later. The neo-liberal Right wing of Social Democracy will regroup and not just disappear, as many on the Labour Left hope. The advantages to business of achieving an ‘Americanisation’ of politics are too great (5). Thus, despite the biggest crisis seen in the British Labour Party for 80 years, it is still the Right that calls the shots, with Lord Mandelson firmly in control. His programme for fighting the next general election is stepped-up ‘reform of the public sector’, i.e. further attacks on workers’ pay, pensions and conditions, further widening in the quality of provision in education, health, etc, and more privatisations (6). The parliamentary Left has been virtually silent over the current crisis in the party.</p>
<p>Thus, a striking trend in this Euro-election has been the very poor performance of Social Democratic and Labour Parties. Overall, the European Socialist Party (<acronym title="European Socialist Party">ESP</acronym>) lost 35 members. Compared with the successes of incumbent Right governments in Italy and France, sitting Social Democratic/Labour governments (whether alone, or in coalition) fared particularly badly, losing seats in Austria (-3 seats), Belgium (-2 seats), Estonia (-2 seats), Hungary (-5 seats), Netherlands (-4 seats), Portugal (-5 seats), Slovenia (-1 seat), Spain (-3 seats) and the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> (-6 seats).</p>
<p>Social Democratic parties also did badly in Denmark (-1 seat) Finland (-1 seat), Poland (-1 seat), where they don’t hold office, but are also committed to neo-liberal policies. Two examples of Social Democratic parties doing spectacularly badly, despite not being in office, are to be found in France (-9 seats) and in Italy (7) (-12 seats). Again, these particular parties remain committed to the neo-liberalism, which has hit their own working class voters hardest. In Italy, the majority Social Democrats no longer even stand independently, but form part of the liberal Democratic Party (<acronym title="Democratic Party">DP</acronym>).</p>
<h4>c) Liberal Centre</h4>
<p>The Alliance of Liberals and Democrats (<acronym title="Alliance of Liberals and Democrats">ALDE</acronym>) (which includes the British Liberal Democrats) also fell back 5 seats in the European Parliament (despite 5 gains by the affiliated oppositional <acronym title="Free Democrats">FDP</acronym> in Germany). Such parties often form parts of wider coalitions, and hence, with little different to offer, they have suffered electorally from a combined incumbency/irrelevancy factor during the current economic crisis. Most Liberal parties have largely abandoned their earlier social liberalism for neo-liberalism.</p>
<p>In Ireland, Fianna Fail also now forms part of <acronym title="Alliance of Liberals and Democrats">ALDE</acronym>. It leads the West European government responsible for the biggest attacks so far on workers in response to the current crisis. Although, it only lost 1 seat, this is significant, for it no longer has a Euro-seat in Dublin (Fine Gael 1, Labour Party, 1, Socialist Party 1).</p>
<h4>2) Beyond the Mainstream Centre</h4>
<p>For those most badly affected by the current economic crisis, the Euro-election provided an opportunity to show their disapproval. Many of the most disillusioned just abstained. This European election had the lowest overall turnout ever, down from 45.5% in 2004 to 43.1% in 2009 (8). The overall participation rate continued to decline in the majority of <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> member countries. However, the striking feature of this election was the relatively limited political scope of the shifts in electoral choices made by most of those who did vote for non-Mainstream parties.</p>
<h5>a) Nationalist parties</h5>
<p>Indeed, in the case of <span lang="es">Catalunya</span>, <span lang="es">Euskadi</span>, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, it could be argued that votes given to the following nationalist parties &#8211; CiU, <acronym title="Basque Nationalist Party">PNV</acronym>, <acronym title="Scottish National Party">SNP</acronym>, <span lang="cy">Plaid Cymru</span> and Sinn Fein &#8211; are now, in effect, being awarded to alternative but specific local Mainstream parties. All these parties are now well established in the machinery of their particular states, forming the leaderships of, or joining coalitions in devolved administrations (9). These parties all accept, either enthusiastically or pragmatically, the existing corporate capitalist order, whatever limited constitutional and social reforms they might put forward, which continue to upset the Mainstream unionist governments and parties in their particular states – Spain and the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>.</p>
<p>A resurgent Right British nationalism has been a strong feature of this election in Wales and Northern Ireland (see later <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> and Ireland section). Something similar can be seen in Spain, where the ultra-unionist Union for Progress and Democracy (10), drawing support from both the Right and Left, has gained a seat. They want to abolish all the devolved national and regional administrations in Spain.</p>
<p>Whilst the long standing up-and-down political battles between unionism and nationalism in Wales and Euskadi may explain these particular resurgences of unionism, there is also perhaps a fear amongst many voters that solutions to deal with the ongoing economic crisis can not be met at a small nation level.</p>
<h5>b) Populism</h5>
<p>Populism is a politics that appeals to the more economically and politically marginalised, without situating itself firmly on the grounds of class.  At one time this meant populism drew its main support from the petit-bourgeoisie – small farmers, small business owners (e.g. shopkeepers) and artisans, etc. However, where effective working class organisation has fallen apart, leaving many workers atomised and feeling unable to alter the course of events by their own actions, populism has been able to make inroads here too.</p>
<p>Thus, populism has both Right and Left variants. To its Right, populism merges with Fascism based on the petty bourgeoisie, the economically threatened sections of the middle class, and the atomised sections of the working class. To its Left it merges with Socialist (or Labour Left) politics based on the organised (or would-be organised) working class.</p>
<p>Populism has been the main overall winner of the votes of those wishing to express their political discontent with the Mainstream Centre in the current economic crisis. Many disenchanted people were prepared to vote for the populists’ eye-catching political, economic and social proposals, despite these being essentially minimalist or dangerously diversionary.</p>
<h5>c) Right populism</h5>
<p>In most cases, it has been Right populism that has benefited in these elections. It has already been pointed out that, despite being an Italian Mainstream party, and a constituent of the largely Centre Right <acronym title="European Peoples Party">EPP</acronym>, Berlusconi’s <acronym title="People of Freedom">PdL</acronym> and its Northern League ally, have successfully made Right populist, anti-migrant appeals to the Italian electorate.</p>
<p>Another big electoral winner was the Right populist and national chauvinist <acronym title="United Kingdom Independence Party">UKIP</acronym> in Britain (11) (+2 seats). <acronym title="United Kingdom Independence Party">UKIP</acronym> emerged in this election with the second biggest number of votes after the Tories. <acronym title="United Kingdom Independence Party">UKIP</acronym>’s electoral advance was all the more remarkable given the early defection of its most well known spokesperson, Kilroy-Silk, and the jailing of one of its first <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym>s for corruption, after the 2004 Euro-election. In Austria (+2 seats), Finland (+1 seat), Greece (+1 seat), and particularly in the Netherlands (+4 seats), anti-migrant Right populists have all made considerable gains.</p>
<h5>d) Fascist/Right populist alliances</h5>
<p>However, to these constitutional Right populist parties, it is also necessary to add the votes and seats won by those former Fascist and those still Fascist parties, which have now either fully adopted Right populist politics (e.g. Fini’s National Alliance component of the <acronym title="People of Freedom">PdL</acronym>), or which use such politics to mask their own continuing support for a full-blown fascist project (e.g. the <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym>). This is because where these parties have been electorally successful, it has been by making Right populist, and not openly Fascist appeals.</p>
<p>Ironically, the political compromises, which have led some Fascist organisations to adopt Right populist clothing  (and an acceptance of constitutionalism), have produced parallel tensions amongst the Fascists, to those found amongst Socialists, where the pull of Left populism is just as strong.</p>
<p>One hallmark of a fully developed Socialist organisation is its readiness to use mass democratic action in defiance of the existing anti-democratic constitutional order to advance its aims. In today’s non-revolutionary situation, still largely marked by a continuing Capitalist Offensive, the Socialists can only to aspire to such levels of opposition and organisation. Instead, we try to build for such future action by promoting, for example, independent (‘unofficial’) strikes or occupations.</p>
<p>In the meantime, though, many on the Left get drawn into the central running of bodies, which by their very nature are involved in the day-to-day running of capitalism, e.g. trade unions, quangos, etc. This can lead many to accept gradualist Reformism and/or a resort to Left populism.</p>
<p>In comparison, the hallmark of fully developed Fascist organisations is the use of goon squads and/or paramilitary forces to win control of the streets, and to deny any political (or public) space for Socialists and others (e.g. ethnic minorities, gays, etc.). However, present day Fascists do not currently enjoy the support of their ruling classes, so such activities, when exposed, can lead to spells in jail. Therefore recently, such parties have tried to downplay this particular characteristic and appear ‘respectable’.</p>
<p>In the absence of concerted working class resistance, European ruling classes can still bring about the counter-reforms they need, by resort to legal attacks on workers’ livelihoods, rights and organisations (e.g, anti-trade union laws), with the help of the existing Mainstream parties. These all try to meet the needs of the existing corporate capitalist order, whatever other policy differences may divide them.  Therefore, the extra-legal services of the Fascists are not yet required.In the meantime, Fascists get drawn into working on community and local councils, and parliaments. Some mellow in the process, becoming subordinate partners in wider Broad Right alliances, and pushing constitutional Right populist politics.</p>
<p>This means that those Fascists not just satisfied with just moving Mainstream politics further to the Right (which could lead to their co-option or marginalisation in the future), want to maintain their hardcore cadre through attacks on migrants, gays and others (these attacks can still be publicly disowned by the official leadership).</p>
<p>For these Fascists, new anti-migrant laws are not ends in themselves, but a means to create a wider climate of racism and chauvinism in which the Fascists can move ‘like fish in water’. Today, attacks on individuals, or upon small marginalised groups, particularly in areas where Fascists have some electoral support, are the main type of activity giving the initial training they require, for a time in the future, when they may yet be called upon by sections of the ruling class and the employers to physically crush workers’ organisations.</p>
<p>In the current political situation, Italy shows us the most likely political impact of the rise of Fascist and other xenophobic Far Right forces on the politics of other western European countries. There is not going to be any immediate ‘March on Rome’. Fascists have been able to move the Mainstream parties to the Right, by promoting anti-migrant and anti-sexual liberation policies. These help to keep the working class divided.</p>
<p>In the past, Thatcher contributed to the demise of the National Front by adopting some of their racist rhetoric, and Sarkozy has tried the same in France. Berlusconi’s Italy is also instructive. The Right populist <acronym title="People of Freedom">PdL</acronym> has absorbed two former fascist organisations, Fini’s National Alliance and Alessandra Mussolini’s Social Action.</p>
<p>Germany, like Italy, has its own fascist past. However, in marked contrast to the Italian Fascists, most present day German Fascists remain full-blooded Fascists, i.e. anti-Semitic Nazis, when most others have switched their hatred to Moslems or Roma (tacitly encouraged by many official state policies and the tabloid press). Consequently German Nazis have been unable to make any breakthrough into national politics (whilst still remaining a grave physical threat to migrant workers, particularly in the many of the depressed parts of former East Germany).</p>
<p>Parties spanning the Fascist/Right populist spectrum did well in Eastern Europe, where nearly all the Mainstream parties are to the right of their western equivalents, reflecting their continuing reaction to the legacy of Russian ‘Communist’ domination (12). In Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria, seats have been won by the violently chauvinist, anti-Roma, anti-gay, Jobbik (+ 3 seats), Greater Romania (+ 3 seats) and Attak (+2 seats) parties. The current economic crisis has hit Eastern Europe particularly hard, and Socialism  (at least in its genuine internationalist form) is still associated in many minds with old-style Stalinism, so the political situation here is looking increasingly grim.</p>
<h5>e) Left populism and Socialism</h5>
<p>The Greens are the best example of a populist politics that makes most  (but not all of) of its appeal to left of centre voters. The Greens made small, but nevertheless significant advances in Belgium (+1 seat), Denmark (+1 seat), Finland (+1 seat), Germany (+1 seat) (where they have been out of coalition governments for long enough that many people have forgotten their past record in office). Overall, they gained 13 seats in the European Parliament, only losing seats in Italy and the Netherlands, where Right populism made significant advances.  Elsewhere, the Greens increased their vote, except in Portugal (where they are in the same party &#8211; the <acronym title="Christian Democratic Union">CDU</acronym> &#8211; as the official Communists) – and in Ireland, where they have paid the cost of being in an unpopular governmental coalition with Fianna Fail.</p>
<p>Furthermore, Greens have made serious inroads into the voting base of certain Socialist groups (whether ex-official Communist or Left Social Democrat/Labour), which also adopt Left populist politics. These inroads are apparent in the election results, for example, of France, Britain (including Scotland), but perhaps most spectacularly in Denmark, where the 2 <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym>s of the Socialist Peoples Party (SPP) (+1 seat) now sit as observers in the Green Euro-group.</p>
<p>France has seen some of the biggest class struggles in Europe in recent years, with massive strikes and resistance by migrant workers. This has resulted in a willingness to vote left of the Mainstream Centre in the Euro-election. The Fascist/Right populist National Front lost 3 seats showing how class struggle can shift the terms of political debate.</p>
<p>However, despite some favourable opinion polls, the Trotskyist, <acronym title="Revolutionary Communist League">LCR</acronym>-initiated, New Anti-Capitalist Party, a very recent Socialist formation, just failed to get <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym>s elected. This was partly because a major push was made by the French establishment to marginalise this latest challenge (just as it did, when the National Front’s Le Pen emerged as the main alternative when the Right Centrist Chirac in the 2007 French Presidential election).</p>
<p>Thus the Greens (13) in France were seen to be a relatively safe alternative, and they managed to corral the majority of the left of Centre protest votes. They won another 8 seats bringing them up to 14 (3 more than the British Labour Party!)</p>
<p>Furthermore, the Left Front, consisting of the French Communist Party (<acronym title="French Communist Party">PCF</acronym>), the Left Party (a breakaway from the French Socialist Party, which hopes to emulate Germany’s <span lang="de">Die Linke</span>) and the Unitarian Left (a rightist breakaway from the Trotskyist <acronym title="Revolutionary Communist League">LCR</acronym>, which did not join the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym>) formed another Left populist electoral alliance, united around Left nationalist politics (14).</p>
<p>The Left Front managed to gain 2 more seats (albeit on less than a 1% increase in the vote for the 2004 <acronym title="French Communist Party">PCF</acronym>-led Euro-slate). Therefore, although they contributed to just stopping the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> from winning any seats, the overall 6.5% vote gained for this Left Front populist slate merely disguised the continued downward spiral of its main component, the <acronym title="French Communist Party">PCF</acronym>. It also highlighted the lack of support for those Left Social Democratic forces that joined them, whom the <acronym title="French Communist Party">PCF</acronym> and others have long sought to woo.</p>
<p>In Germany, as in France, most of the protest vote went not to the right but to the left, albeit more weakly, with one new seat won by the Greens and one by <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> (15) (which was expected to do better). <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> is an alliance of the Party of Democratic Socialism (<acronym title="Party of Democratic Socialism">PDS</acronym>) (successor to the Socialist Unity Party, the former official Communist Party in East Germany) and the Labour and Social Justice Electoral Campaign (<acronym title="Labour and Social Justice Electoral Campaign">WASG</acronym>), Lafontaine’s Left breakaway from the German Social Democratic Party.</p>
<p>Where it holds offices in the local administrations (in the former East Germany), the <acronym title="Socialist Unity Party">SED</acronym> behaves like other Social Democratic Parties, implementing cuts. The western-based <acronym title="Labour and Social Justice Electoral Campaign">WASG</acronym> has opposed this course so far. However, the new <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> leadership supported the bail-out of German banks in the <span lang="de">Reichstag</span>, and tacitly supported Israel in its Gaza invasion, so, in the longer term, <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> looks fated to follow a similar path to <span lang="it">Rifondazione Comunista</span> in Italy and the United Left in Spain, where working class support slumped after these parties gave their support to cuts-implementing Social Democratic governments.</p>
<h5>f) The long term decline of official Communism and the <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym></h5>
<p>Any examination of the official Communist-led <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> Euro-group shows that, despite the current economic crisis, it is a largely declining force, mainly due to the Communist parties’ one-time links with the failed <acronym title="Union of Soviet Socialist Republics">USSR</acronym>, but also to their member parties’ willingness to join, or prop up Social Democratic Centre governments administering cuts or promoting imperial wars.  Overall the <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> lost 5 of the Euro-seats that it held in 2004.  In Italy, <span lang="it">Rifondazione Comunista</span> representation in the European Parliament was wiped out (following a similar setback in the Italian general election in 2008).</p>
<p>In Spain, the <acronym title="Communist Party">CP</acronym>-led United Left also lost a seat. Even in Greece, despite the recent massive upheavals, the local Communist Party, the <acronym title="Communist Party of Greece">KKE</acronym>, still lost a seat. The <acronym title="Coalition of the Radical Left">SYRIZA</acronym> alliance, its newly formed rival, also fell back on the % vote won by its largest constituent organisation, Synaspismos, in the 2004 Euro-election (as well as that it gained in the 2007 Greek general election). In Greece, against the grain, the Social Democratic <acronym title="Panhellenic Socialist Movemen">PASOK</acronym> vote held up and emerged as the main winner in the Euro-election. This is probably due to a combination of being in opposition, and a longstanding ability to adopt Left populist (and Left nationalist) rhetoric when necessary.</p>
<p>Only in Cyprus has the local Communist Party, <acronym title="Progressive Party of Working People">AKEL</acronym>, really held its own, retaining its 2 seats. Uniquely for the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym>, a Communist Party forms the elected government in Cyprus. However, this is more due to it being seen as the best bet for reuniting a country, still partly occupied by Turkish armed forces. Much of <acronym title="Progressive Party of Working People">AKEL</acronym>’s appeal is Cypriot nationalist.</p>
<p>In both Sweden and Denmark, Left nationalism is the declared principle of the two the Left populist <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> affiliates in these particular countries &#8211; the anti-<acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> Left Party and the Peoples Movement Against the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym>, respectively. Both of these parties include former official Communists, now that their parties have dissolved.</p>
<p>The Left Party lost a seat in Sweden, where the party leading the current government, the Centre Right Moderate Party, and the libertarian populist Pirate Party, made the biggest advances.  In Denmark, the parties forming the sitting Liberal/Right Centre/Right populist government all advanced, whilst the Social Democrats fell back sharply. The <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> affiliated Peoples Movement against the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> (principally backed by the Red Green Alliance in Denmark) was able to substantially increase its vote in these propitious circumstances, but without gaining an extra seat (16). A much bigger proportion of the Left vote in Denmark went to the non-<acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> Socialist Peoples Party, which did gain an extra seat.</p>
<p>In the Czech Republic, the local Communist Party, <acronym title="Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia">KSCM</acronym>, lost 2 seats. Here however, in one of the few exceptions to the trouncing of Social Democrats, the Czech <acronym title="Social Democrat">SD</acronym> party gained 5 seats. This was partly due to the continued decline of the <acronym title="Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia">KSCM</acronym>, once of course, the ruling party in the whole of Czechslovakia. The <acronym title="Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia">KSCM</acronym> is the last official Communist Party from Eastern Europe with European Parliament representation to remain in the <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> (17).</p>
<p>So, although in France and Denmark, official <acronym title="Communist Party">CP</acronym> backed, Left populist alliances – the Left Front and the Peoples Movement against the <acronym title="European Union">EU</acronym> – both increased their votes, as part of a general Left populist swing in these countries, in these countries other Left populist parties did better  &#8211; the Greens and the SPP respectively.</p>
<h5>g) An emerging Socialist alternative to official <acronym title="Communist Party">CP</acronym> Left populism?</h5>
<p>The two countries where local <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> affiliates did best are the Netherlands and Portugal.  In the Netherlands, the Socialist Party’s vote largely held up, and it retained its 2 Euro-seats, despite the unnerving slide by most protesting voters to anti-migrant, anti-Islamic Right populists. However, the Socialist Party does not come from the official Communist tradition. It comes from a Maoist background, although now long abandoned, and stands on an openly Socialist platform, based on working class politics.</p>
<p>The Left Bloc’s results in results in Portugal were remarkable. The Left Bloc, like the Socialist Party in the Netherlands, has Maoist roots, which it has abandoned.  However, it has opened itself to other Socialist forces, and unlike the Socialist Party in the Netherlands, it also forms part of the European Anti-Capitalist Alliance (<acronym title="European Anticapitalist Left">EACL</acronym>). Nor is the Left Bloc the only <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> affiliate in Portugal. There is also the Democratic Unity Coalition (<acronym title="Christian Democratic Union">CDU</acronym>), the permanent Left populist alliance between the official Communists and the Greens, which stand together under this name in European, national and local elections.</p>
<p>In a situation where the incumbent Portuguese Socialist Party (Social Democratic) government lost spectacularly in the Euro-elections, most of the non-Mainstream vote went left. However, it was not the initially better placed <acronym title="Christian Democratic Union">CDU</acronym>, which gained. Its vote fell back slightly, whilst retaining its 2 Euro-seats.  It was the Left Bloc that hugely increased its vote and won 2 more seats. Thus, the Portuguese Left Bloc has picked up the lead baton for Socialists in Europe.</p>
<p>The failure of the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> in France to win any Euro-seats is hopefully a temporary setback in the formation of an alternative, more clearly working class-based, Socialist alliance in Europe. Relating to the rising level of class struggle, the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> stood on the basis of clear class politics – ‘Make the Bosses Pay for Their Crisis’. That is the way to give a political lead to workers involved in current class struggles, where the official trade union leaders and Social Democratic parties try to limit the purpose of any action to ‘sharing’ the costs around – i.e. workers should accept some cuts as an example for the bosses to follow!</p>
<p>It will be interesting to see the political direction taken another Socialist &#8211; Joe Higgins of the <acronym title="Committee for a Workers' International">CWI</acronym>-affiliated Socialist Party. He won the Dublin seat previously held by the Irish <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> affiliate, Sinn Fein (18). Will Higgins take an active part in the European Anti-Capitalist Left (<acronym title="European Anticapitalist Left">EACL</acronym>), and help contribute to the formation of a distinct international Socialist Left group within the <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym>? Or, will he behave like another Trotskyist group, <span lang="fr">Lutte Ouvriere</span> from France, which won 3 seats in the 1999 Euro-election (with another 2 going to its then electoral allies, the <acronym title="Revolutionary Communist League">LCR</acronym>), but then proceeded to try and advance its own group’s interests above those of the wider international socialist movement? It lost all of its seats in the 2004 Euro-election.</p>
<p>Many Socialists may be critical of the politically ambiguous names of the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> or the Left Bloc. Nevertheless, so long as they remain democratic organisations, positively engaged in the class struggles in their countries, with an unwavering commitment to internationalism, those Socialists in these countries, who really want to influence events, should be participating, whilst Socialists elsewhere in Europe should be helping to build the <acronym title="European Anticapitalist Left">EACL</acronym>.</p>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>
<p>1. Until recently the <acronym title="European People's Party">EPP</acronym> grouping also included Cameron’s British Conservatives, so the defection of their 26 <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym>s, underestimates the real gains made by the Centre Right, since the 2004 Euro-election.</p>
<p>2. Sarkozy has a Right populist anti-migrant past, but more recently, after major social revolts, has been forced to adopt a more Right Centrist public position</p>
<p>3. Italy is a country where the <acronym title="Communist Party">CP</acronym> was once a considerable force in politics. Furthermore, as in Spain, most of the Socialist Left worked inside the <acronym title="Communist Party">CP</acronym>.</p>
<p>4. Unlike those on the Left who equate capitalism with anti-state economic interventionist neo-liberalism, genuine Socialists/Communists have long understood that capitalism is always prepared to resort to a more statist model, when in difficulty, without changing its essential nature. The essence of capitalism is not the promotion of unfettered market relations – neo-liberalism &#8211; but the promotion and defence of wage slavery by both 	economic and political means.</p>
<p>5. One indication that this pattern has been firmly established, will be when we hear of companies which fund both Conservatives and New Labour, just as some <acronym title="United States">US</acronym> businesses fund both Republicans and Democrats.</p>
<p>6. The next stage of Royal Mail privatisation has only been temporarily shelved.</p>
<p>7. Wikipedia lists 12 of the 25 <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym>s in the Christian Democrat/Liberal/Social Democrat (including former Communists)/Green 2004 Olive Tree alliance as sitting with the Social Democratic ESP. After the 2009 election, it lists all 21 <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym>s from its Democratic Party successor, as forming an independent Euro-group.</p>
<p>8. This can not just be put down by the accession of Bulgaria (39% turnout) and Romania (28% turnout), two new member states from eastern Europe, where there has been traditionally been a low turn-out rate.</p>
<p>9. The <acronym title="Basque Nationalist Party">PNV</acronym> recently lost control of the devolved Euskadi administration, after being in control for more than 2 decades.</p>
<p>10. An equivalent party in Scotland/<acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym> might unite Tam Dayell and Michael Forsyth.</p>
<p>11. Despite its name, <acronym title="United Kingdom Independence Party">UKIP</acronym> does not stand for elections in Northern Ireland, although the <acronym title="Ulster Unionist Party">UUP</acronym> would share quite a few of this party’s characteristics. However, in a not widely understood move by Cameron, the Conservatives have already linked up with the more genteely sectarian <acronym title="Ulster Unionist Party">UUP</acronym> (as opposed to the more openly sectarian <acronym title="Democratic Unionist Party">DUP</acronym>), as well as with Right populists from Poland and the Czech Republic to form a new Eurosceptic alliance in the European Parliament.</p>
<p>12. One example of this is the Social Democratic Party in Slovakia, which has 	even been thrown out of the ‘Socialist International’, because it formed a government coalition with an anti-Roma, hard Right party!</p>
<p>13. The Greens Left populist (and Left nationalist) credentials were helped by the participation of Jose Bove, a popular figure from the Anti-Globalisation Movement.</p>
<p>14. In many ways the Left Front is like the wider British electoral alliance, No2EU, hoped to create, being based on populist politics.Although in the case of the No2EU, it accommodated further right, ditching not only the word ‘Socialist’ but even the word ‘Left’ to dish the <acronym title="British National Party">BNP</acronym>.</p>
<p>15. Unlike the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym>, <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> is not opposed to joining coalitions with Social Democrats. Nevertheless, most of the political forces supporting the European Anti-Capitalist Left in Germany have joined <span lang="de">Die Linke</span> as distinct tendencies, just as many previously joined <span lang="it">Rifondazione Comunista</span>, in its earlier left-posing days.</p>
<p>16. However, in this case the actual <acronym title="Member of European Parliament">MEP</acronym> elected belongs to the Trotskyist. <acronym title="United Secretariat of the Fourth International">USFI</acronym>. The Red Green Alliance was formed by members of the former official Communists, the <acronym title="United Secretariat of the Fourth International">USFI</acronym> affiliated Trotskyists, former Maoists, and a section of the Left Social Democrats (most of whom went to the Socialist Peoples Party, however). Danish <acronym title="United Secretariat of the Fourth International">USFI</acronym> supporters appear to be on the <acronym title="United Secretariat of the Fourth International">USFI</acronym>’s more Left populist wing, compared with say those in the <acronym title="New Anticapitalist Party">NPA</acronym> in France. The Red Green Alliance has faced similar controversy in Denmark over alliances with Muslim politicians to that caused by Respect in the <acronym title="United Kingdom">UK</acronym>.</p>
<p>17. Elsewhere in Eastern Europe, the traditional Communist parties have reformed themselves into Social Democratic parties, joining the ‘Socialist International’. They are all very much on the ‘modernising’, ‘market reform’ accepting wing of European Social Democracy.</p>
<p>18. Sinn Fein, currently the only <acronym title="European United Left–Nordic Green Left">EUL/NGL</acronym> affiliate in Ireland, is rather the odd party out in this Euro-group. It has no other past or present official or dissident Communist affiliations. Its connection dates from the time Sinn Fein was more keen to be seen as part of the international anti-imperialist movement, where association with official Communists brought about valuable links, e.g. with South Africa. Sinn Fein’s has maintained its seat in Northern Ireland, where politics is dominated by constitutionally enforced sectarian allegiances. Here, Sinn Fein has cornered the Catholic nationalist market.</p>
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		<title>The Socialist Alliance in England</title>
		<link>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2002/07/26/the-socialist-alliance-in-england/</link>
		<comments>http://republicancommunist.org/blog/2002/07/26/the-socialist-alliance-in-england/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Jul 2002 19:44:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RCN</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Emancipation & Liberation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[England]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issue 02]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issue 15]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Publications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republicanism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Author: Dave Spencer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bolsheviks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NHS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SLP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Socialist Alliance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Socialist Unity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SSP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SWP]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://republicancommunist.org/blog/?p=1221</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dave Spencer has been a committee member of Coventry Socialist Alliance since 1992. Before its abolition in 1986, he was a Labour Councillor on West Midlands County Council. Here he assesses the way forward for the SAs in England. The SA in England is a hybrid organisation &#8211; neither a party nor a federation. On [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Dave Spencer has been a committee member of Coventry Socialist Alliance since 1992. Before its abolition in 1986, he was a Labour Councillor on West Midlands County Council. Here he assesses the way forward for the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym>s in England.</h2>
<p>The <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> in England is a hybrid organisation &#8211; neither a party nor a federation. On the one hand it consists of several Left Groups who seem intent on maintaining their own identities. On the other hand it attracts individual members who would probably prefer the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> to be more like the Scottish Socialist Party. It is an organisation in transition.</p>
<h3>United organisation is needed</h3>
<p>In my view it should be in transition towards a party. This means the Left Groups should have some strategy of withering away within the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> in the not too distant future. As I see it there are no major political differences between these groups that could not be contained in an open and democratic socialist party. The most important differences used to relate to the nature of the old Soviet Union – was it a deformed workers’ state, state capitalist or bureaucratic collectivist? Some believe it still is a workers’ state apparently – good luck to them – but is it a dividing issue here and now? I think not. So why do they still maintain their separate existences when the crying need is for a united organisation to fill the vacuum left by the implosion of Stalinism and the commitment to global capitalism of Social Democracy?</p>
<p>Events in the recent French presidential elections show that this is not just a British disease; the French Left is split into several Left Groups for no obvious political reason. The separateness is historic, stemming back into faction fights in the 1950s. These Groups find it difficult to move on politically, to think strategically or to work with other people without running the show. They seem stuck in the world of several decades ago yet with an incredible air of smugness and self congratulation – in spite of what is quite clear to everybody else – that they have failed to attract a large working class base. Frankly would you like to live in a society run by Peter Taaffe or Chris Harman and his cohorts or by Lutte Ouvriere, the Lambertistes or the Sparts for that matter. I rest my case. The working class may be somewhat backward in consciousness at the moment but they are not entirely stupid – they are not going to vote en masse for these people. These Groups appear to outsiders more like the revolutionary groups in The Life of Brian than anything that is seriously going to change society.</p>
<p>The two characteristics of Left Groups almost as an iron law are sectarianism and bureaucratic centralism.  I take sectarianism to mean putting their own organisation first above the interests of the working class as a whole.  I take bureaucratic centralism to be a top down approach from the central committee – no real democracy, no accountability, no involvement of the creativity of the membership or of the working class. To me these two features of Left Groups need to be exposed and fought against; they are obstacles on the road to building a mass working class party.</p>
<h3>Sectarianism</h3>
<p>Examples of sectarianism abound but just to take a few examples. The December 1st Conference of the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> in England saw the sectarian departure of the Socialist Party who had to some extent dominated the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> since 1996. At that time they had seen the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> as a tactical means of heading off the possible appeal of Scargill’s <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym>. They really did not have any strategic idea of what to do with the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym>. They could pick it up and use it for their own party building or drop it as the case may be. They could have developed it along the lines of Scottish Militant and the <acronym title="Scottish Socialist Party">SSP</acronym>. They chose not to do so. In the run up to the December Conference the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> comrades in Coventry argued for a federalist structure for the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> on the grounds that why should they give up the hard won contacts and bases that they had built up through consistent work day in and day out so that the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> could walk into their patch and make members — why should their members be told what to do by people with less commitment and experience. To me the role of the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> in the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> has been sectarian from day one. They put the building of their own party before developing a broad alliance. Their view now is that the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> is a rival to be fought against.</p>
<p>Since December 1st the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> have become the dominant force in the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym>. At the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> public meeting in Coventry during the local elections, on every chair was placed a leaflet advertising the next <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> Marxist Forum meeting, not the next <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> meeting. The <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> do not seem to be clear what to do with the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> either! They seem to see <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> activities as a vehicle for <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> party building in the same way as the <acronym title="Socialist Party">SP</acronym> did.</p>
<p>Old habits die hard of course but they have to die and be given a kicking on the way. Some comrades argue that it is a really good sign that the Left Groups have come together. Others argue that this is more a sign of huddling together for warmth rather than a desire to build something new. Perhaps it is a mixture of both. At the first meeting of the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> Independents in Birmingham in January there were two main points of view. One welcomed the new <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> structure and the involvement of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym>. Their idea was to swamp the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> with more independent socialists so that the members of the Left Groups become less dominant, less sectarian and the political differences less obvious. The other view was more critical of the <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> and gave examples of <acronym title="Socialist Workers Party">SWP</acronym> sectarianism in their <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> branches which make it very difficult or well nigh impossible to work with them. Their view was that the Left Groups are actually a barrier rather than a help in recruiting independent socialists to the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym>.</p>
<p>In my view sectarian behaviour should be exposed on every available opportunity, even at the risk of being called sectarian because you are being critical! As Trotsky put it in the <cite>Manifesto of the Fourth International</cite> – <q>not for one single day should we tolerate sectarians in our organisation</q>.</p>
<h3>No to Machiavelian manoeuvrings</h3>
<p>The question of bureaucratic methods should also be exposed. The internal regimes of most Left Groups make the bourgeois courts seem enlightened. Members are encouraged to behave like sheep rather than being trained like self sufficient Bolsheviks. In some cases Left Groups from the Stalinist tradition like Scargill’s <acronym title="Socialist Labour Party">SLP</acronym> do not believe in democracy and at least that is clear. To me that is a splitting issue; we should have nothing to do with people who are against democracy. No say in the running of the organisation – no membership. Marxism and socialism must be heard and must be debated openly. No diktats from above, no Machiavelian manoeuvrings and spindoctoring. Full accountability of the Central Committee with instant recall. At the moment it is as though some Left Group leaders are frightened of their membership and certainly frightened of them talking to heretics from other groups or independents in case they get contaminated.</p>
<p>Open political and theoretical discussion is absolutely vital in the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> branches. There are a number of reasons for this. It is no longer clear what socialism means any more. The Stalinist and Social Democratic versions have gone but their message still lingers on. The idea of nationalising all industries as in Clause 4 of the <acronym title="Labour Party">LP</acronym> constitution was a simple slogan. But in the age of globalisation we need more international ideas for running a socialist economy. And nationalisation itself is not the end of the matter. We can demand the re-nationalisation of the railways but what we want is a socialist integrated transport policy. What would that be like? We can demand more money for the <acronym title="National health Service">NHS</acronym> and an end to privatisation but what would a socialist health system be like? Green ideas of sustainability must be addressed; the ideas of changing the course of rivers and moving mountains about like Trotsky promised during the Russian Revolution seem to us like a nightmare today. We need to draw together programmes for a socialist future – not just react in a defensive way to the attacks of the ruling class. In planning our programmes we should draw on the experience of the workers in the industries and services concerned.</p>
<h3>Prioritise long term aims</h3>
<p>Political discussion at a time when the answers are not obvious must be open. That means comrades must be prepared to say what they think and sometimes get it wrong and change their mind. It must be a process where comrades develop politically not an arm wrestling contest between various Groups or factions or a fight for who can win the vote.</p>
<p>To transform the <acronym title="Socialist Alliance">SA</acronym> into a mass party, creative ways have to be found of involving the working class – the youth, the women, ethnic groups as well as Trade Unionists. This means organising in working class estates in a consistent manner not just arriving at election times. This is not easy but it is very rewarding and examples of good practice need to be shared and copied. This sort of work tends to break down sectarianism and bureaucratic methods because the long term aim of building a working class party is put before the short term aim of winning a few recruits or a vote for a particular sect.</p>
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